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SOROS' $$ TOPPLES DA IN WAR OVER DRUGS (This Is Gettin' Scary)
New York Post ^ | September 16, 2004 | KENNETH LOVETT

Posted on 09/16/2004 5:04:47 AM PDT by publius1

SOROS' $$ TOPPLES DA IN WAR OVER DRUGS By KENNETH LOVETT Post Correspondent September 16, 2004 -- ALBANY —

In an unusual infusion of big money into local upstate politics, billionaire George Soros poured cash into the Albany County district attorney's race — and engineered a stunning defeat of the incumbent because the DA supports the strict Rockefeller drug laws.

The Soros-founded Drug Policy Alliance Network — which favors repeal of the Rockefeller laws — contributed at least $81,500 to the Working Families Party, which turned around and supported the successful Democratic primary campaign of David Soares.

Trying to become Albany's first black DA, Soares on Tuesday unexpectedly trounced his former boss, incumbent Albany DA Paul Clyne, who has opposed changing the drug laws. The victory was overwhelming: Soares took 62 percent of the Democratic vote.

"This was more than a local race, that's what the [Soros] funding shows," said Assemblyman John McEneny, who supported the challenger's candidacy.

Soros, an international financier and philanthropist who says he is dedicating his life to defeating President Bush, favors legalizing some drugs.

Clyne backers claim that the Working Families Party, using the Soros money, illegally involved itself in the Democratic primary. They charge the Soros cash was used to target Democratic voters with mass mailings and phone calls labeling Clyne as the reason the drug laws were not reformed, as well as highlighting his anti-abortion stance.

(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: buyingelections; campaignfinance; drugwar; leroywouldbeproud; soros; wod; wodlist
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Soros in the Albany DA race, and Club for Growth money in a State Senate race in Onondaga County. Looks like the big money guys are twisting the meaning of an old truism--that all politics is local.

This cannot be a good development.

1 posted on 09/16/2004 5:04:48 AM PDT by publius1
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To: publius1
A sinister attempt to destroy the communities most harmed by drug dealing and drug use.

Much as the first abortion clinics were opened in minority communities to keep that population down.

2 posted on 09/16/2004 5:06:52 AM PDT by OldFriend (It's the soldier, not the reporter who has given US freedom of the press)
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To: publius1

I'm no fan of Soros, but the Rockerfeller drug laws are tyrannical to their core, and representatives who support them deserve to get beaten.


3 posted on 09/16/2004 5:07:02 AM PDT by thoughtomator ("With 64 days left, John Kerry still has time to change his mind 4 or 5 more times" - Rudy Giuliani)
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To: publius1

bump for research file


4 posted on 09/16/2004 5:42:48 AM PDT by newsgatherer
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To: thoughtomator
The Rockefeller laws are hardly tyrannical.

The entire movement against them is basically whining by affluent parents who are upset that their little darling has to do ten years for selling coke in his dorm.

It's not their fault or their kid's fault that their child is a disgusting degenerate who gets his kicks preying on the weakness of others - it's the evil, tyrannical state of New York.

I wonder if you or any of these jokers understands what tyranny actually is.

5 posted on 09/16/2004 5:52:13 AM PDT by wideawake (God bless our brave soldiers and their Commander in Chief)
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To: wideawake
... I wonder if you or any of these jokers understands what tyranny actually is.

I wonder if you or any of these jokers understands what freedom actually is.

6 posted on 09/16/2004 5:56:10 AM PDT by 68 grunt (3/1 India, 3rd, 68-69, 0311)
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Looks like there's a storm brewin' here...


7 posted on 09/16/2004 5:59:20 AM PDT by NewLand (Stop watching ALL network TV if you want to STOP liberals.)
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To: 68 grunt
I wonder if you or any of these jokers understands what freedom actually is.

I'll define one form of freedom for you - the freedom in knowing that your day is your own and that it won't have to be spent in stealing, borrowing or begging for just enough money to buy your next fix.

You believe in theoretical freedom - I believe in the actual article.

8 posted on 09/16/2004 6:01:15 AM PDT by wideawake (God bless our brave soldiers and their Commander in Chief)
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To: wideawake

The Rockerfeller laws are in plain contravention of the 4th, 5th, and 8th Amendments to the Constitution - amendments constructed with the specific intent of making impossible a repeat of the tyrannical abuses of the King of England. In addition, they are not only a current failure, but prohibition laws are also a historical failure.

What tyranny is, is the failure to respect the inalienable rights of man. What the above-referenced Amendments are, are enumerations of some of those rights. Therefore, the Rockerfeller laws are tyrannical.

If you knew what tyranny is, then you would see as clearly as I do that the Rockerfeller laws are.


9 posted on 09/16/2004 6:09:13 AM PDT by thoughtomator ("With 64 days left, John Kerry still has time to change his mind 4 or 5 more times" - Rudy Giuliani)
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To: 68 grunt

Apparently it's not the freedom to have the contents of your body unregulated by the government.


10 posted on 09/16/2004 6:10:13 AM PDT by thoughtomator ("With 64 days left, John Kerry still has time to change his mind 4 or 5 more times" - Rudy Giuliani)
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To: publius1
Boy those anti-capitalist libs sure respond well to sales & marketing don't they?
11 posted on 09/16/2004 6:33:35 AM PDT by Verax
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To: thoughtomator

Under the Rockerfeller drug laws someone who steals my car or holds me up at knifepoint will do less time than a street dealer who gets caught with one shift's supply of heroin or crack. That's only morally wrong but pragmatically stupid -- I don't think drug dealing is a victimless crime, but the victims are least willing participants...


12 posted on 09/16/2004 6:40:28 AM PDT by only1percent
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To: wideawake
... I believe in the actual article.

Mighty prejudicial in your definition of freedom. All these phony laws do is to teach us to break the law. The more we break the law the easier it is to reconcile. We pick and choose the laws we follow, and the more we reconcile our lawlessness the easier it is to justify further breaking of bull$hit laws. The more laws there are; the less law there is.

Legalize everything, 99.9% pure. Have the goobermint provide it, along with a hole in the desert to drop your carcass. I guarantee there will be fewer addicts after the first year. You'll uncrowd the prisons, you'll get rid of a disgusting element, fertilize the desert, and, the bodies of the dead addicts will set a wonderful example against drug use for our children. If your son or daughter ends up as fertilizer you must accept the blame for planting the seed of temptation.

13 posted on 09/16/2004 6:45:25 AM PDT by 68 grunt (3/1 India, 3rd, 68-69, 0311)
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To: only1percent

I really don't see why drugs require locking people up for decades whereas homosexuality (a real killer) is protected, and drinking and smoking tobacco are tolerated. The only real purpose I can see is that such laws enable the government to more fully control its citizens. If you live in NYC like I do, you see potheads all the time, and you see drunk people all the time, and there's no question that of the two, the drunk people are the ones you want to avoid.


14 posted on 09/16/2004 6:57:46 AM PDT by thoughtomator ("With 64 days left, John Kerry still has time to change his mind 4 or 5 more times" - Rudy Giuliani)
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To: 68 grunt

Legalize everything, 99.9% pure. Have the goobermint provide it, along with a hole in the desert to drop your carcass. I guarantee there will be fewer addicts after the first year. You'll uncrowd the prisons, you'll get rid of a disgusting element, fertilize the desert, and, the bodies of the dead addicts will set a wonderful example against drug use for our children. If your son or daughter ends up as fertilizer you must accept the blame for planting the seed of temptation.""

If you get all of that, I want this in return:

ANY theft, burglary, robbery, carjacking, embezzlement, etc with ANY connection to drugs MUST be punishable be DEATH, with no appeals, no delays. Firing squad- swift and final.
Also- if you want to use drugs- NO employer can hire you. I do not want all my products to skyrocket in price because "employers" are required to keep you on the payroll, and you're now a workmen's comp liability. So using these drugs will place you outside the ranks of the employed. No free housing, no free food, no free transportation. You will be shunned from society. Drugs are your choice, but I will NOT be punished for your stupid choices.

If they are going to have easy access, then there is ABSOLUTELY NO EXCUSE for bothering those of us who do not use drugs.


15 posted on 09/16/2004 6:58:49 AM PDT by ridesthemiles (ridesthemiles)
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To: thoughtomator
The Rockerfeller laws are in plain contravention of the 4th, 5th, and 8th Amendments to the Constitution - amendments constructed with the specific intent of making impossible a repeat of the tyrannical abuses of the King of England.

If this were the case, the extremely liberal NY judiciary would have thrown them out on Constitutional grounds long ago.

The 4th Amendment is obviously not violated by the law - there is no exemption for law enforcement from probable cause under the law.

Neither is the 5th Amendment violated either. The law provides for open indictments and full due process for the accused - again their are no exemptions for law enforcement under this law.

Nor is the 8th Amendment. Prison sentences for crimes are neither cruel nor unusual - and "excessive" bail is and has always been in the eye of the beholder. The defendant always thinks bail is too high.

What tyranny is, is the failure to respect the inalienable rights of man.

That's a pretty weak and specious definition.

What tyranny actually is, by historical definition, is a system wherein the governed have no say - a system usually reserved to the arbitrary whim of a single unelected ruler.

When the Founders were framing the Constitution, their notion of tyranny was clearly modeled on the Greek institution of tyranny (arbitrary rule of one man with no redress for citizens) and by what they saw as the tyranny of Great Britain - namely that by being deprived of Parliamentary representation, the colonists were effectively ruled by the arbitrary whim of the King without any means of redress.

Even if we pretend that selling crack is an "inalienable right" of man, which it manifestly isn't, a law passed by (and subject to the repeal of) the people's elected representatives is the definitional opposite of tyranny.

Unless you can prove that the Rockefeller laws sanction warrantless searches without probable cause, sanction indictments without benefit of grand juries, sanction conviction without due process etc., then your citation of the Bill of Rights is laughable. In point of fact, anyone convicted under the Rockefeller laws was served with a warrant, was indicted by a grand jury, was provided full recourse to counsel and a fair trial, and received a merited prison sentence.

The fact that you and a minority of NY residents don't like a law passed by the majority of the people's elected representatives is just too bad for you and your friends.

If you don't like it, make your case to the electorate and vote in a State Assembly that will pass laws that you prefer.

In the meantime, the law is the law.

Therefore, the Rockerfeller laws are tyrannical.

You have actually given two variant definitions of "tyrannical" now. One is, apparently, the "violation of the inalienable rights of man." That is a novel definition heretofore unknown. Your second definition is "violation of the Bill of Rights." Not all violations of the Bill of Rights are tyrannical - they are all unconstitutional but not all are "tyrannical." So this is erroneous as well.

If we go by the definition of tyranny our Founding Fathers used, the Rockefeller laws are not tyrannous.

Nor are they a violation of the "rights of man" unless the freedom of selling crack has now magically taken its place alongside the freedom of worship and freedom of the press.

If you knew what tyranny is, then you would see as clearly as I do that the Rockerfeller laws are.

Ah, but I do know what tyranny is. What you don't seem to understand is that spewing hysterical rhetoric does not enable you to redefine words to your liking. You believe that smoking crack is an important, imperishable, divine right. Believe that as fervently as you desire.

But please don't pretend to have a monopoly on "seeing clearly."

16 posted on 09/16/2004 6:58:50 AM PDT by wideawake (God bless our brave soldiers and their Commander in Chief)
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To: only1percent

By the way... very pertinent current and relevant, check out the story on the baseball player who threw a chair into the stands, seriously injuring a woman, and the pleas on his behalf for leniency.


17 posted on 09/16/2004 6:59:07 AM PDT by thoughtomator ("With 64 days left, John Kerry still has time to change his mind 4 or 5 more times" - Rudy Giuliani)
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To: ridesthemiles
Excellent proposition. I would certainly agree to full legalization if the drug buyers were forced to shoulder the entire burden of their addiction.

I would add one thing: if you offer drugs to my children, I reserve the right to kill you, free and clear.

18 posted on 09/16/2004 7:01:10 AM PDT by wideawake (God bless our brave soldiers and their Commander in Chief)
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To: wideawake

Ah NOW I see clearly. You are a left-wing troll who thinks words can mean whatever you want them to mean. What the heck are you doing on FR? Wasting the time of people who love freedom?


19 posted on 09/16/2004 7:01:13 AM PDT by thoughtomator ("With 64 days left, John Kerry still has time to change his mind 4 or 5 more times" - Rudy Giuliani)
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To: 68 grunt
The citizens of the State of New York can decide how they want to live. The Rockefeller drug laws have been on the books for over 30 years -- obviously the citizens have had ample time to decide that they don't like them.

And what is Soares' alternative? "... treatment programs, education and job opportunities are needed to effectively tackle the problem."

Uh-huh. A drug treatment program for a scumbag drug dealer. That'll work. Actually, that'll introduce him to whole new clientele, won't it?

Education and job opportunities? Yeah. Tell the drug dealer with that PhD in astrophysics that he could be putting his education to better use. Tell that 18-year-old 7th grade dropout that he'd be better off making $7.50/hr. at McDonald's than $400./day dealing drugs.

You're not proposing drug freedom -- you're proposing drug anarchy.

20 posted on 09/16/2004 7:03:35 AM PDT by robertpaulsen
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